Lecture 5: Bioelectricity, Functional Electrical Stimulation and Neuromuscular Prosthetics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lecture 5: Bioelectricity, Functional Electrical Stimulation and Neuromuscular Prosthetics

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Title: Lecture 5: Bioelectricity, Functional Electrical Stimulation and Neuromuscular Prosthetics


1
Lecture 5 Bioelectricity, Functional Electrical
Stimulation and Neuromuscular Prosthetics
2
Lecture Overview
  • "Animal Electricity" Brief History
  • Biopotentials
  • Muscles revisited A Bioelectric Perspective
  • Equivalent Circuits A Model for bioelectronic
    Implant
  • Functional Electrical Stimulation
  • Device Design and Challenges
  • Bioelectrodes The Weakest Link
  • Smart Materials for Neuroprosthetic Devices
  • Case Study Biohybrid device for Peripheral Nerve
    Injuries
  • Next week Biosensors, Biomonitoring devices

3
Discovery of Bioelectricity
  • " The idea grew that in the animal itself there
    was an indwelling electricity. We were
    strengthened in such an assumption of a very fine
    nervous fluid that during the phenomenon flowed
    into the muscle from the nerve, similar to
    electric current   
  • Luigi Galvani, 1791

4
Bioelectricity Opposition and Evolution
  • Galvani attributed bioelectricity to a life
    force vitalism vs. mechanism
  • Alessandro Volta(1794) suggested that the effect
    was only due to dissimilar metals thus
    discrediting Galvanis hypothesis
  • Carlo Metteuci broke the deadl-lock and confirmed
    Galvanis experiment
  • Metteuci showed that action potential precedes
    contraction of skeletal muscles
  • Led to emergence of new discipline
    Electrophysiology
  • Basic Notions of Electrophysiology necessary to
    design certain medical devices

5
Ringers experiment Placed two hearts One in
tap water, one in distilled waterOnly one of
the hearts ceased to contract. Which one ? Why?
How is electricity "produced" in the
body?What are the basic components of an
electric circuit ?What would their biological
equivalent be?
6
Origin of Bioelectricity Membrane Potentials
  • Electric currents  in the body occur through
    ion flow
  • Ions Na, K, Cl-, Ca2
  • Ion permeability is regulated through
  • Osmosis
  • Ion pumps
  • Ion channels
  • Ion exchangers
  • Concepts
  • Resting Potential
  • Action Potential
  • Depolarization
  • Hyperpolarization

7
Circuit Elements in Bioelectricity
  • Capacitor
  • Inductor
  • Resistor
  • Impedance Total Opposition to currents in the
    circuit

8
(No Transcript)
9
Resting Potentials
ion cytoplasm outside Veq
Na 12 140 64 mV
K 135 4 -92 mV
Cl- 5 150 -89 mV
10
Measuring Ion Concentrations
Nernst Equation
Goldman Equation
11
Muscles Revisited
12
  • Draw equivalent circuit models for muscle
    contraction combining the electrical and
    mechanical compenents

13
What is a Bionic Device ?
  • Intelligent, adaptive device capable of
    interacting with the human body in a
    bidirectional manner
  • Direct contact with bodys command and control
    systems
  • Seamless, intertwining of electronics, mechanics
    and materials
  • Biomimicry Closely replicates physiological
    function

14
Functional Electric Stimulation
  • Rehabilitation technique using low-level
    electrical current to enhance that patients
    ability to function and live independently
  • Device
  • Controller
  • Stimulator
  • Leads/ Electrodes

15
Spinal Cord Injury A snapshot
16
Functional Electrical Stimulation to restore
movement
  • Bionic Gloves for reaching, grasping and
    releasing
  • Peripheral Prosthetics for Elbow extensions
  • Restoring shoulder movement
  • Locomotion Peripheral, Spinal and Central

17
Biopotentials for Control and Feedback
ENG
EEG
EMG
18
Functional Electric Stimulation and
Rehabilitation The carry-over effect
  • Improves the fitness and strength of remaining
    units
  • Reduces amount of spasticity
  • Improves connectivity tissue stretch
  • Reasons unclear, but possibly related to cortical
    reorganization

19
Functional Electric Stimulation Limitations of
first generation of implants
  • Reverse recruitment fast twitch before slow
    twitch leading to muscle fatigue
  • Virtual lack of closed-loop control via afferent
    pathways
  • Steep recruitment of muscle fibers results in
    robot-like movements
  • Inflexibility of stimulation patterns ,
    non-adaptibility
  • Adverse reaction at electrode interface
  • Encapsulation and surface fouling of electrodes
  • Spill-over Neighbouring muscles inadvertently
    recruited

20
BIONIC DEVICES TO RESTORE LOCOMOTION
21
Epidural Spinal-Cord Stimulation
  • Stimulation of the dorsal structures
    (locomotion-like ENGs)
  • Combined with weight-bearing threadmill therapy
  • Facilitates gait
  • Effective only in incomplete injuries
  • Lack of selectivity, muscle synergy

22
An Improvement Intraspinal Microstimulation
  • Tapping into patterned movements of the legs
  • Ventral horn is the best place to activate
    weight-generating extension
  • Ventral Horn Interneurons, motor neurons
  • Able to produce all the muscle synergies required
    for stepping
  • Microstimulation in lamina IX of the lumbosacral
    spinal cord
  • Stable recordings over time
  • Near-normal recruitment order
  • ISMS can generate weight-bearing stepping after
    SCI
  • Superior to epidural or peripheral nerve
    stimulation

23
Bypassing the spinal cord .
24
Brain-controlled Implants Cortical Neural
Prosthetics
  • IMPLANT
  • Chronic Multielectrode arrays
  • Extraction Algorithms (EA)
  • Effectors (robot, intrinsic muscles)
  • Primary Motor Cortex organised in a body map
  • Movement-related information encoded as firing
    rate
  • Firing rate is directionally tuned
  • EA convert firing rate into movement displacement
  • Successful control of a robotic arm using a
    monkeys brain

25
Current Technological Limitations
  • Adaptibility DOES NOT extend to activating
    afferent pathways
  • Ineffective in activating multiple muscle
    systems, muscle synergies obtained only in rare
    cases.
  • Does not adapt to neuronal reorganisation and
    hyperexcitabality in SCI
  • Electrodes lead to scarring, encapsulation and
    signal attenuation
  • Inefficient power sources
  • Inadequate signal processing algorithms
  • Lack of concise biomechanical models to correlate
    neuronal discharge rate to movement dynamics and
    kinematics.

26
The Future (or Part of it)
  • Idea of shared control suggested by Dr. Nicolesis
  • Stimulating Central Pattern Generators for
    rhythmic movement (bidirectional interfacing)
  • Novel Bioelectrodes
  • Building Implantable Neuromuscular Implant based
    on work on artificial muscles by Rajagopalan et
    al.
  • Body-powered implants

27
Distributed or Shared Control
  • Device-to-device communication
  • Implant in motor cortex communicates with device
    in limb
  • Possibility of more natural movements, sensorial
    feedback
  • Not feasible for movement of lower extremities ?

28
Novel Bioelectrodes A Biomimetic Neural
Interface
  • Biomimicry Design of structures and mechanics
    closely resembling living tissue and system
  • Conducting Polymer Electronic conduction, ion
    transport and cellular adhesion and growth
  • Polyelectrolyte gel mechanical and chemical
    properties similar to living tissue. Biomimetic
    ion exchange and transport phenomena
  • Designed as Stand-Alone Electrode

29
Motivation Challenge
  • Nerve-electrode interface remains the weakest
    link in neuroprosthetic devices.
  • Drawbacks of current bioelectrodes include
  • Poor anchoring at nerve interface
  • Mechanical mismatch between metal electrodes and
    soft tissue
  • Inefficient charge transfer, signal attenuation
  • Inflammatory response Build-up of fibroblasts at
    stimulation site
  • Current Solutions Surface modification of
    electrodes with conducting polymers, bioadhesive
    molecules
  • Results Decreased impedance (?), decrease in
    inflammatory response. Incremental improvements,
    but fundamental problems persist.
  • Novel Solution A paradigm shift biomimetic
    approach through field responsive polymers

30
Solution A "Smart" Cuff Electrode
  • Problem Poor anchoring at interface
  • Solution Soft thermo-morphing Armature
  • Problem Mechanical mismatch, attenuated charge
    transfer
  • Solution Neuro-mimetic electrode
  • Problem Inflammatory Response - Build up of
    Fibroblasts
  • Solution Drug-eluting Electrode

31
Soft Thermomorphing Armature
  • Poly(isopropylacrylamide)
  • Biocompatible
  • Reverse solubility at body temperature
  • Widely used in medicine for cell adhesion, drug
    delivery
  • Can be fabricated as solid hydrogels

32
Soft Thermomorphing Armature
Thermosensitive PNIIPAM layer Passive
polyacrylamide layer
DESIGN FRONTAL VIEW PRINCIPLE LATERAL
VIEW
Tgt 35.5
33
Neuro-mimetic Electrode
34
The Nerve Sodium Currents
http//www.egms.de/figures/journals/cto/2004-3/cto
000002.f18.png
35
Neuro-mimetic Electrode
  • Electrochemical Polymerisation
  • Both pyrolle and poly(sodium acrylate)
    electrochemically deposited on metal electrode
  • Chemical Polymerisation
  • Polypyrrole electrostatically deposited on
    poly(sodium acrylate) gel

36
Conductivity of Composites
  • 8515 Ratio of Polypyrrole, PSA produces optimal
    miscibility, texture and conductivity
  • Conductivity 10-1 S/cm
  • Inferior to results obtained in literature.
    Resistance greater than that of platinum
    electrode
  • Results by Martin et. al show decrease in
    impedance with coating of polypyrrole
  • Possible explanations microporosity, thickness,
    gel layer
  • To be optimised following in-vivo tests
  • Na-ion release to be confirmed through atomic
    abosrption spectroscopy

37
Drug-eluting Electrodes
38
Drug-Electroding Stents
www.fda.gov
39
Drug-eluting Polypyrrole The Mechanism
40
Anti-inflammatory Drug Fosfosal
  • Negatively-charged Molecule.Exists as a salt
  • Can serve as counterion to polypyrrole
  • Electrically-released on activation
  • Benzoic Acid used as stand-in for current
    experiments
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